Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush abruptly ended a town hall meeting Wednesday in Las Vegas, Nevada, after a Black Lives Matter protester raised a poignant question “about the disproportionate number of minorities killed by police,” according to the Los Angeles Times.

While Bush acknowledged that racism still exists in America, he quickly turned the subject toward his record on education while serving as Florida’s governor, before departing the meeting without giving a closing statement, writes the news outlet.

“I have a record of empowering people in communities that” were told “they had no chance,” Bush said, ending the town hall. He did not deliver a closing statement, as he typically does, and quickly made his way to an exit, greeting supporters along the way.

Behind him, a few dozen protesters raised their fists and began chanting, “Black Lives Matter!” A few Bush supporters turned toward them and chanted, “All Lives Matter!” and “White Lives Matter!” Two women — a protester and a Bush supporter — stood a few feet from the candidate with their middle fingers extended in each other’s faces.

Black Lives Matter protesters have been making their voices heard at presidential rallies across the nation in recent weeks, including shutting down Democratic candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders at a rally in Seattle, Washington.

Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton met with the group on Wednesday after they were banned from attending her event in New Hampshire, CNNsays. And GOP presidential frontrunner Donald Trump, speaking Tuesday at a fundraiser in Michigan, said he would fight Black Lives Matter protesters if they try to take his microphone.

#BlackLivesMatter activists Jamie Hall and Daunasia Yancey spoke with Roland Martin Thursday on NewsOne Now about the movement’s protest actions, disrupting campaign rallies and holding 2016 presidential accountable. See what they had to say about confronting 2016 presidential candidates in the video clip below.